Abstract
Stimulation of the adaptive immune system in the gut is thought to be mainly initiated in the Peyer's patches as well as in the mesenteric lymph nodes (mLNs) and results in immunoglobulin A (IgA) secretion by plasma cells in the lamina propria. However, the precise role of the mLNs in the development of IgA immune responses is poorly understood. Thus, cholera toxin (CT) was administered to mLN-resected and mLN-bearing animals and the IgA response to CT in the intestine and serum was examined. Levels of CT-specific IgA antibodies and the numbers of cells producing these antibodies in the intestine were increased in mLN-resected rats. Particularly in the distal parts of the intestine, the jejunum and the ileum, IgA responses to orally administered antigens developed were stronger in the intestine after removal of the mLNs. This strongly indicates that the mLNs play a critical role in modulating the expansion of specific IgA responses. After removal of the mLNs, the lymph from the gut flows directly into the blood. It was investigated whether the spleen is involved in the initiation of an immune response to orally administered CT after removal of the mLNs. In the spleens of mLN-resected animals, proliferation was up-regulated, and germinal centres were formed in the follicles. However, CT-specific IgM(+) cells, but no IgA(+) cells, developed. Additionally, an increase of CT-specific IgM in the serum was found in mLN-resected animals. Thus, the data indicate that the spleen is involved in the immune response to CT after mLN resection.
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